Consolidated composite materials by powder metallurgy

ABSTRACT

Directed to the powder metallurgy production of consolidated metal products wherein the starting material comprises dense wrought particles containing at least 15 percent by volume of a compressively deformable metal with the remainder being one or more other metals or non-metals with the internal structure of the particles being non-porous and with the constituents thereof being intimately united and interdispersed, i.e., mechanically alloyed, said particles, upon consolidation, yielding metal or cermet products having unusual properties and capable of compositioinal characteristics not available as a result of other processing techniques.

United States Patent [1 Benjamin CONSOLIDATED COMPOSITE MATERIALS BY POWDER METALLURGY [75] Inventor: John Stanwood Benjamin, Suffern,

[73] Assignee: The International Nickel Company,

Inc., New York, NY,

[22] Filed: Aug. 6, 1971 [21] Appl. No.: 169,791

Related U.S. Application Data [63] Continuation of Ser. No. 849,133, Aug. 11, 1969, abandoned, which is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 709,700, March 1, 1968, Pat. No. 3,591,362.

[52] U.S. Cl. 75/0.5 BC [51] lint. Cl B22f 9/00 [58] Field of Search 75/O.5 BC

[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,289,897 7/1942 Balke et a1 29/192 2,302,616 1l/1942 Linz 75/122 2,763,918 9/1956 Megill 75/176 2,853,767 9/1958 Burkhammer 75/0.5

n C e r 20 v N (J Jrr7 Z :S S

1111 3,785,801 Jan. 15,1974

3,372,021 3/1968 Forbes et a1. 75/O.5 2,823,988 2/1958 Grant 75/O.5 3,053,706 4/1959 Gregory 148/31 3,085,876 4/1963 Alexander 75/206 3,218,135 11/1965 A1exander..... 29/1825 3,382,066 5/1968 Kenny 75/208 Primary ExaminerW. W. Stallard Att0rneyMaurice L. Pine] [57] ABSTRACT 3 Claims, 4 Drawing Figures PATENTEDJAH 15 I974 3,785,801

SHEET 3 [IF 4 PATENTED JAN 15 I974 SHEET '4 [IF 4 CONSOLIDATED COMPOSITE MATERIALS BY POWDER METALLURGY The present application is a continuation of Ser. No. 849,133, filed Aug. ll, 1969, now abandoned, which 5 is in turn a continuation-in-part of US. application Ser. No. 709,700 filed Mar. 1, 1968 now U.S. Pat. No. 3,591,362.

This invention relates to metal products and to their production by powder metallurgy.

When metal products are made by melting, numerous problems arise. These include the occurrence of dendrites and other forms of segregation in castings of complex alloys, which lead to difficulties in working and with non-uniform response to heat treatment. Brittle segregates impair the ductility of the cast material.

If the segregates are of a very low melting composition they may lead to the phenomenon known as hot shortness severly limiting the permissible hot working range, and even when working is possible segregated regions persist in elongated form which give rise to anisotropic properties and other disadvantages.

These problems may to some extent be overcome by the techniques of powder metallurgy, which is also the most convenient way of producing dispersionstrengthened metals and alloys and other products consisting of finely divided immiscible constituents. Nevertheless, powder metallurgy presents other problems of its own.

Since the possibility of homogenization is limited to that which can be brought about by sintering, thermal diffusion in the solid state and localized melting, a starting material is required that contains the constituents in a finely divided and uniformly distributed condition. Thus, in making an alloy from a mixture of elemental powders the powders must be very fine, e.g., 25 or 10 or even 3 microns or less in size, so that the alloy can be rendered homogeneous by diffusion in a reasonably short time, and such powders tend to be pyrophoric and to pick up impurities, such as oxygen from the atmosphere, which contaminate and adversely affect products made from them. Mechanically mixed powders of different densities also tend to segregate on storage and handling of the mixture, leading to nonuniformity in products made from the mixture.

To avoid the need for mechanical mixing, pre-alloyed powders may be used, for example, those made by atomisation from a molten bath of the alloy, but these are expensive, difficult to obtain with controlled particle size, and may even contain substantial dendritic segregation.

Similar difficulties arise in making dispersionstrengthened metals and alloys by consolidating mechanical mixtures of the constituents. Here, especially fine metal powders are desirable, with the associated risk of contamination, and there are also the further problems that the refractory dispersoid particles tend to flocculate owing to static electrical charges and that constituents of different densities tend to segregate on 60 storage and handling of the mixture. Flocculation and segregation both lead to non-uniformity of the final wrought product owing to the formation of stringers of dispersoid particles and adjacent areas impoverished in the dispersoid. I 65 Such stringers and associated defects are deleterious to structural elements used under stress, particularly at high temperatures. The impoverished regions do not contribute significantly to the strength of the product, and a body in which the impoverished areas constitute more than 10 percent by volume will be significantly weaker than one without such defects. In addition, the gross concentrations of refractory particles within the stringers themselves provide sites for stress concentration and can be an important factor in causing failure at elevated temperatures, especially by fatigue.

Non-mechanical processes of producing mixtures of metal and non-metal particles for consolidation include the internal oxidation process, in which a powder, e.g., nickel or copper containing a reactive solute element such as aluminium, silicon, titanium, zirconium or thorium, is selectively oxidised to form fine refractory oxide particles dispersed through the metal matrix. This process also requires fine metal particles; is gener ally limited to simple binary alloy systems; and furthermore is difficult to apply to chromium-containing nickel-base alloys and stainless steels without oxidising the chromium. Thus, this method is generally only applicable to simple systems such as NI-Al, Cu-Al, Ni-Th or Cu-Si, where the free energy of formation of the oxide of the matrix metal is up to 80,000 calories/gram atom of oxygen. If however the whole of the alloy powder is first oxidised and then selectively reduced to leave the refractory oxide it is difficult to reduce the matrix oxide completely, particularly if it includes oxides of such metals as chromium, aluminium and titanium.

Various wet techniques have also been proposed for the production of dispersion-hardened metals and alloys. The ignition surface coating process involves coating metal or alloy powders with a decomposable salt of the intended refractory oxide dispersoid by mixing the particles with a solution of the salt and evaporating the liquid. Thus, nickel powder may be mixed with a solution of thorium nitrate in alcohol. The coated powder is then heated in an inert or reducing atmoshpere to convert the salt to the corresponding oxide, as particles which coat the surface of the metal particles. Here again, the need for fine metal powders in order to achieve close spacing of the dispersoid particles introduces the risk of contamination; care must be taken to avoid pyrophoric combustion of the powder when it is treated to decompose the salt; and segregation may occur since the last of the liquid to evaporate tends to be very rich in the salt. Microstructures of wrought metal products produced by this method tend to show stringers of dispersed oxide.

In the selective oxide reduction process an intimate mixture of metal oxides, one of which is reducible while the other provides the dispersed oxide phase, is made, for example, by co-precipitating the hydrates of the metals, converting them to oxides, and selectively reducing the matrix metal oxide to metal. The resulting powders can be extremely fine and pyrophoric and, therefore, highly susceptible to contamination. This and other wet methods present difficult materials handling problems, tend to be messy, and are usually costly.

It has been proposed in UK. Specification No. 821,336 to employ, as starting materials for powder metallurgical processes, powders comprising composite particles consisting of a high-melting point, hard refractory material and a ductile metal, the particles of one constituent being coated by the other. The methods of making such particles described include the chemical or vapour phase deposition of metal on the refractory particles, and the production on particles of the ductile metal of a surface layer of a metal forming a refractory oxide which is then oxidised. Similar particles result from the conventional ball-milling of mixtures of a ductile metal and a refractory oxide, e.g., mixtures of nickel and thoria, for prolonged periods at the usual ball-to-powder ratios, e.g., up to 3:1. All composite powders of this type have the disadvantage that the particle size of the metal core of the particle is essentially that of the initial powder used and that this relatively coarse structure is carried over into wrought products made from the powder, leading to stringers of dispersoid and associated dispersoid-free areas.

In making powder-metallurgical products from metals normally immiscible in the liquid and/or solid, e.g., iron and copper, a skeleton sintered from powder of one metal may be infiltrated with the other molten metal, or a mixture of the two metal powders may be sintered. Whichever method is used, the distribution of the copper is limited either by the size of the pores in the skeleton or by relative size of the starting powders. The presence of a liquid phase during the infiltration or sintering also tends to cause microsegregation The present invention overcomes these various difficulties and provides consolidated metal products having a very high degree of microstructural uniformity and isotropy and substantially free from segregation and stringers.

Objects and advantages of the invention will becomeapparent from the following description and the accompanying drawing in which:

FIG. I is a schematic representation of an attritor of the stirred ball mill type capable of providing agitation milling to produce composite powders for use in accordance with the invention;

FIG. 2 is a reproduction of a photomicrograph taken at I diameters showing in longitudinal section a microstructure of a dispersion-strengthened superalloy provided in accordance with the invention after an anneal at 2,250F. for 4 hours in argon; and

FIG. 3 is a reproduction of an electron photomicrograph taken at 10,000 diameters of a surface replica of a dispersion-strengthened superalloy shown in FIG. 2

FIG. 4 is an electron transmission photomicrograph taken at 100,000 diameters showing the structure of another dispersion-strengthened superalloy provided in accordance with the invention. H

Broadly stated, the invention contemplates the production of consolidated metal products characterised by a high degree of microstructural uniformity and substantially devoid of segregation and stringers by consolidation, e.g., by hot extrusion, hot pressing, forging, etc., unique composite wrought metal particles containing at least percent by volume of a deformable metal with the remainder being a metal or a non-metal, said particles having an interdispersed, mechanically alloyed internal structure. 7

A non-dispersion strengthened product is to be regarded as substantially free from stringers or segregation if it contains less than 10 volume percent of stringers or of regions exceeding 25 microns in minimum dimension in which there is a significant composition fluctuation from the mean, that is to say, a deviation in composition exceeding 10 percent of the mean content of the segregated alloying element. The boundaries of a segregated region are taken to lie where the c omposi-..

tion deviation from the mean is one-half of the maximum deviation in that region. Regions of composition deviation of less than 25 microns in minimum dimension are not regarded as segregated regions. Preferably, the minimum dimension of the stringer or region of compositional fluctuation does not exceed 10 microns. Preferably, also the proportion of stringers or of segregated regions is less than 5 volume percent. Compositional variations on the scale discussed above may, for example, be detected and measured by electron microprobe examination.

The products are advantageously made, according to the invention, by the consolidation of special composite powders. These powders and methods for their production are described and claimed in US. application No. 709,700, now US. Pat. No. 3,591,362.

The powders used consist of wrought composite particles having a cohesive, non-porous internal structure made up of two or more intimately united and interdispersed constituents, at least one constituent, amounting to at least 15 percent by volume of the particles, being a compressively deformable metal, and the composite particles individually having substantially the composition of the powder. The internal structure of the composite particles may be regarded as a mechanical alloy.

The constituents of the composite particles, other than the deformable metal, may be other metals or non-metals, including refractory oxides and other hard phases useful for dispersion-strengthening alloys. The term metal in this specification and claims is to be understood as including alloys.

The average spacing between the sub-particles of the constituents inter-dispersed in the composite particles should be as small as possible in order to facilitate thermal diffusion of inter-diffusible constituents when they are heated to promote alloying. Advantageously, it does not exceed l0 microns and preferably, especially in the case of dispersion-strengthened products, does not exceed 3 microns or even 1 micron, and it may be much less than 1 micron, while the composite particles conveniently average from 20 to 200 microns in size, though larger particles may be used where it is possible to make them with a fine enough internal structure, and smaller particles can be used when the systems involved are sufficiently noble to avoid pyrophorocity.

It will be appreciated that the advantage of using such wrought composite particles to form consolidated powder metallurgy products arises from the fact that the particles act as building blocks for the final structure, the high degree of uniformity of each of the composite particles being carried forward and maintained in the final wrought product. Conversely, the use of inhomogeneous composite particles containing dispersoids for making consolidated products will not lead to homogeneous products. The spacing between the constituents in the product will of course depend on the amount of reduction occurring during the consolidation, and the spacing will generally be less than in the powder particles.

Spacings less than 3 microns or even 1 micron, preferably very much smaller, are particularly advantageous in the case of powders containing refractory dis- 'persoids.

The powder particles are advantageously in a heavily work-hardened condition, as this accelerates-alloying cilitates hot deformation as, for instance, hot extrusion for consolidation of a confined mass of powder particles. This is believed to be due to the very fine grain structure resulting from a coalescence of the workhardened structure upon heating for hot deformation.

The powder may be made, according to our previous application, by subjecting a mixture consisting of at least percent by volume of a compressively deformable metal powder with one or more other metal or non-metal powders to dry, high energy impact milling, suitably in a stirred attritor ball mill, sufficiently energetic and sufficiently prolonged to reduce the particles of deformable metal to less than half, and preferably to less than one-fifth or even one-tenth of their original thickness and to comminute and bond together the constituents of the mixture to form composite, nonporous wrought particles having a cohesive interdispersed internal structure. To produce the desired structure the milling may be continued, under conditions in which work-hardening occurs, at least until the hardness of the composite particles has been increased by half the difference between the base hardness and the constant saturation hardness reached on prolonged milling. During energetic dry milling composite particles are repeatedly fractured and reformed by cold working, with a progressive increase in the uniformity of the composition of the particles and the refinement of their internal structure. Advantageously, the powder is milled to saturation hardness, and preferably milling is continued beyond this point until the structure has been refined to the desired extent. Milling beyond the point of saturation hardness is particularly desirable in the case of complex alloys, since these attain saturation hardness while their structure is less uniform than in the case of unalloyed metals, owing to the hardening effect of other hard constituents, e.g., fragments of master alloys.

The composite particles thus comprise comminuted fragments of the initial metal particles welded or metallurgically bonded together, the minimum dimension of the fragments being usually less than one-fifth and preferably less than one-tenth of the average dimension of the initial product from which the fragment was derived. Refractory particles included in the initial powder became distributed throughout the individual composite particles in a fine state of dispersion approximately equal to the minimum dimension of the fragments. Thus, the average distance between the refractory particles in the composite particles is much less than the dimension of the initial metal particles, and is advantageously less than 1 micron, and down to 0.5 micron or less. in such particles there are essentially no islands or areas in the composite particles free from dispersoid.

Dry, high energy impact milling may suitably be performed in a stirred attritor ball mill comprising an axially vertical stationary cylinder containing a charge of balls and having a rotatable agitator shaft located coaxially of the mill with spaced agitator arms extending substantially horizontally from it and serving to maintain the bulk of the ball-charge in continuous relative motion. Such a mill is described in Perrys Chemical Engineer's Handbook," Fourth Edition, 1963, at page 8-26, and is shown diagrammatically i n FIG. 1 o f t l 1e accompanying drawings, which shows in partial section an upright cylinder 13 surrounded by a cooling jacket 14 havinginlet and outlet ports 15 and 16 respectively for circulating water or other coolant. A shaft 17 is coaxially supported within the cylinder by means not shown and has horizontally extending arms l8, l9 and 20 integral with it. The mill is charged with balls 21 to a depth sufficient to bury at least some of the arms.

The milling time t required to produce a satisfactory dispersion; the agitator speed W (in rpm); the radius, r, of the cylinder (in cm.) and the volume ratio R of balls to powder are related by the expression:

where K is a constant depending upon the system involved. Thus, once a set of satisfactory conditions has been established in one mill of this type, other sets of satisfactory conditions for this and other similar mills may be predicted by use of the foregoing expression.

Except where it is otherwise specified, the dry impact milling referred to in each of the examples in this specification was performed in a water cooled mill of this type. The rate of milling specified in rpm, is the rate of rotation of the agitator. Unless otherwise specified the mill was sealed to prevent access of air during milling other than that initially present.

Other mills that can be used include vibratory ball mills, high-speed shaker mills and planetary ball mills. Whatever type of mill is employed, the balls or other attritive elements must be hard and tough enough to compress the deformable metal and are preferably of metal or cermet, e.g., steel, stainless steel, nickel or tungsten carbide; of small diameter relative to the mill; and of essentially uniform size. For further details of the production of the powders, reference should be made to US. application No. 709,700.

The composite powders may have an extraordinarily wide range of compositions, and may be used to produce a correspondingly wide variety of composite products. The compositions include a very wide range of metal systems, corresponding to both simple binary and more complex alloys, provided that they include a compressively deformable metal.

The simple alloys include those based on lead, zinc, aluminium and magnesium, copper, nickel, cobalt, iron and the refractory metals. More complex alloys include the well-known heat-resistant alloys, e.g., those based on nickel-chromium, cobalt-chromium, and ironchromium systems containing one or more alloying additions such as molybdenum, tungsten, niobium, tantalum, aluminium, titanium, silicon, zirconium and the like, with or without non-metals such as carbon and boron.

Dispersion-hardened wrought alloys, both simple and complex, may be produced from composite powders having uniform dispersions of a hard refractory compound phase. The refractory compounds include oxides, carbides, nitrides, borides of such refractory mettrix for the hard phase or dispersoid. Where only dispersion strengthening of wrought compositions is desired, as in high temperature alloys, the amount of dispersoid may range from 0.05 percent to 25 percent by volume and, more advantageously, from 0.05 percent to percent or percent by volume.

The process of the invention is also particularly useful in producing wrought products from metal systems whose components have limited or even substantially no mutual solubility in the liquid state and/or solid state, for example, lead or iron with copper, tungsten with copper or silicon, and chromium with copper. It is particularly to be noted that because the constitution of the composite powders is that of an extremely finestructured mechanical alloy, their compositions and thus that of the products made from them is not limited by normal practical considerations using melting techniques or conventional powder metallurgical techniques and that the substantial absence of segregation in the products leads in many cases to a remarkable improvement in workability as compared with cast alloys of the same composition. Many novel and advantageous alloy compositions thus become available in wrought forms. l W

The numerous advantages of the use of the wrought composite particles for making consolidated powdermetallurgy metal products include the protection of reactive components such as chromium, aluminium and titanium from oxidation by their incorporation into and shielding by the matrix of the deformable metal. The composite particles also combine the advantages of a coarse powder, including storage with minimum contamination, ease of out-gassing for canned extrusion, non-pyrophoric properties, good flow characteristics and high apparent density, with an extremely intimate and fine dispersion of the constituents in each particle.

Consolidation of the composite powder to metal products may be effected by any suitable process of mechanical working, including extrusion in a sealed can, forging, rolling and hot pressing. The working temperature will, or course, depend on the nature of the composition concerned. During the heating of the particles to the temperature used for working, any homogenisation and annealing of the particles which can occur will generally take place, but further heattreatment may be performed subsequently if desired. It is generally desirable to de-gas the powder as far as practical before working is carried out. 7 7 g Some of the various types of wrought products of the invention will now be considered in more detail. Superalloys Complex nickel, cobalt or iron-base hightemperature alloys (commonly called superalloys) that contain chromium and are rendered age-hardenable by such alloying elements as niobium, titanium and aluminium and/or are solid-solution hardened by molybdenum or tungsten, tend to suffer from segregation on casting, particularly at high contents of the alloying element. This leads to a non-uniform age-hardening response and to hot-working difficulties. If powder metallurgy techniques or blending of elemental or partially pre-alloyed powders is resorted to, it is found that chrotend to be lost by oxidation, so that they are no longer available for age-hardening, and other disadvantages such as segregation also occurs that have already been mentioned.

Further difficulties arose in the attempt to apply dispersion-strengthening to superalloys owing to the ready formation of stringers of dispersoid, resulting in substantial areas within the alloy which were depleted of dispersoid. Manufacture of superalloys by consolidation of wrought composite powders according to the invention facilitates the avoidance of segregation in standard superalloy compositions; enables the content of alloying elements for age-hardening or solid solution hardening to be increased; and enables dispersionstrengthened superalloys to be readily produced. The resulting wrought products have a microstructure that is substantially uniform throughout, are substantially free from segregation, primary gamma prime phase and stringers, and have a uniform distribution of precipitation-hardening phases as indicated by transmittion transmission photomicrographs. They may be dispersion-strengthened by any of the wide variety of refractory oxides, carbides, nitrides and borides disclosed in more detail hereinbefore.

It has been noted, quite surprisingly, that bodies produced by hot working of consolidated mechanically alloyed powders can be worked to a much greater extent than conventionally produced bodies of the same composition as the matrix alloy. This is seen in reduced temperatures required for comparable amounts of hot deformation, reduced working pressures and greater permissible amounts of working strain.

Broadly speaking, the alloys have a melting point of at least 1093C. and contain from 4 to 65 percent by weight of chromium, at least 1% in total of one or more of niobium, aluminium and titanium, preferably 0.2% to 15% aluminium (e.g., 0.5% to 6.5%), and 0.2% to 25% titanium (e.g., 0.5% to 6.5%), 0 to 40% molybdenum, 0 to 40% tungsten, 0 to 20% niobium, 0 to 30% tantalum, 0 to 2% vanadium, up to 15% manganese, up to 2% carbon, up to 1% silicon, up to 1% boron, up to 2% zirconium, and up to 0.5% magnesium, the balance (at least 25%) being essentially iron, nickel, or cobalt with or without dispersion-strengthening constituents, such as yttria, lanthana, alumina, thoria, etc., in amounts from 0.05% to 10% and preferably 0.05% to 10% by volume of the total composition.

Superalloys with which the invention is particularly concerned include those falling within the range 5 to 35% chromium, 0.5% to 8% aluminium, 0.5% to 10% titanium, up to 12% molybdenum, up to 20% tungsten, up to 8% niobium, up to 10% tantalum, up to 2% vanadium, up to 2% manganese, up to 1% carbon, up to 1.5% silicon, up to 0.1% boron, up to 1% zirconium, up to 2% hafnium, up to 0.3% magnesium, up to 45% iron, up to 10% by volume of a dispersoid which is advantageously thoria, yttria, lanthana, ceria, or rare earth oxide mixtures, such as didymia, may suitably be present in amounts of at least 0.2%, preferably 0.5 to 5% by volume, the balance (at least 40%) being one or both of nickel and cobalt. Some specific examples of superalloy compositions which may be produced with or without a dispersoid are set forth in Table l.

TABLE I Nominal Composition \Vt% Alloy No. C Mn Si Cr Ni Co Mo W Cb Fe Ti Al B Zr Other 7 0.09 19.0 bal. 11.0 10.0 3.1 1.5 0.005

10 0.45 0.25 0.25 21.0 bal. 11.0 2.0 2.0

The stable refractory compound particles may be 20 1,200C. reduced the hardness to 235 Vickers, while maintained as fine as possible, for example, below 0.5 subsequent aging for 16 hours at 705C. brought about microns in size. A particle size range recognized as precipitation-hardening, the hardness increasing to 356 being particularly useful in the production of disper- Vickers. sion-strengthened systems is 10 Angstroms to 1,000 By comparison, wrought alloys having substantially Angstroms (0.001 to 0.1 micron). the same matrix composition, produced by conven- The heavy cold work imparted to the composite tional melting techniques, had a hardness of 200-250 metal particles produced by milling the high-melting Vickers after annealing, which was raised to 290-320 metals to produce superalloy compositions is particu- Vickers by a similar aging treatment. larly advantageous. It increases effective diffusion coefficients in the product powder and this factor, along EXAMPLE H with the intimate mixture in the product powder of A mixture consisting, by weight, of 39.5% of a powmetal fragments from the initial components to provide dered master alloy of particle size less than 43 microns small interdiffusion distances, promotes rapid and containing 67.69% Ni, 8.95% Mo, 5.70% Nb, homogenisation and alloying of the product powder 15.44% A], 1.77% Ti, 0.053% C, 0.06% Zr and 0.01% upon heating to homogenising temperatures and im- B; 45.74% of carbonyl nickel powder of particle size 5 proves hot workability as explained hereinbefore. The i 11 64% f hromium owder of ti l i foregoing factors are of particular value in the producl th 74 i r nd 3,12% of thoria f r i l tion of powder metallurgy arti l s hav g rather f size 0.04 microns, was dry milled for 48 hours in air in plex alloy matrices- Some example will now be glvehl an attritor mill at a ball-to powder ratio of 29:1 by volume and a speed of 176 r.p.m. Microscopic examina- EXAMPLE I tion of the powder revealed that the constituents had A powder mixture consisting, by weight, of 14.9% of intimately united together to form composite metal a powdered Ni-Ti-Al master alloy Containing Ni powder particles which showed excellent inter- 72.93%, Ti 16.72%, A] 7.75%, Fe 1.55%, CU 0.62%, C dispersion of the ingredients,

(103370. 2 3 0.05%, z f; 6225% A portion of the powder product, after removal of bony] nickel powder of partlcle size 5-7 mi coarse particles larger than 350 microns was extruded 19.8% of chromium powder of particle sizeless than 74 to b i a Stainless t l can f degassing under microns; and 305% of thoria of P i vacuum at 425C), using an extrusion ratio of 16:1 and cron, was preblended and 1,300 gwas y Impact a temperature of 1,200C. The resulting bar had the milled under argon for 48 hours in an attritor mill at a 50 analysed i i C 007% 10.10% M0 ball-to-powder ratio of 17:1, running at 176 r.p.m. The 3 Nb 1,60%, A] 5.20%, Ti 0.65%, B 0.007%, Zr product consisted of composite powder particles exhib- (103%, Th0, 3.20%, A1 0 0.38%, TiO, 0.018%, C130 iting excellent inter-dispersion of the ingredients within 1 Ni b l Th A1 0 was present as an i ithe individual particles and having a striated structure mate dispersion d h proportion f the extraneous under a fi of nalysi of il oxides, TiO and Cr O was thus very low.

powder was Ni 193%, Ti 216%, Al 119%, Portions of the extruded bar were heated to 1,240C. C Cu less thim (105%, z 293%, ls for4 hours in argon to solution-treat the alloy, increase 1 2 The amount of other lmpumles its grain size and complete the homogenisation of the was neghglblestructure, and then fumace-cooled to allow precipita- After removal of some coars p h h g than tion-hardening to occur. The grain structure of the 350 116mm, the Powder havmg 3 Particle Size range of alloy after this treatment is shown at a magnification of 45 to 350 microns was ext ud t bar in 8 Stainless X100 in FIG. 2 of the drawings. It will be noted that the Steel can after degassing under Vacuum X mm grain structure is elongated in the direction of extrug) at 350C using an extrusion ratio of 16 1 and a sion. On examination by electron microscopy after this temperature of 1,175C. The extruded bar contained a fine and uniform dispersion of thoria particles of average size 0.04 micron with an inter-particle spacingof treatment the alloy was observed to contain both a gamma prime precipitation-hardening phase and an intimate dispersion of thoria particles of average size 0.05 micron, with an inter-particle spacing of less than 1 micron. The fine structure under the electron microscope at 10,000 diameters is shown in FIG. 3 of the drawings.

The high-temperature properties of the alloy after heat-treatment are set forth in Table 11.

TABLE 11 Test Yield Strength Tensile Elongation R.A. Temp. 0.2% offset Strength gl g/ m) terms of the stress at which the alloys exhibited lives of 100 and 1,000 hours at 1,093C.

TABLE 111 Life Stress for indicated life (kg/mm) Alloy Hours Th0,containing alloy 713 EXAMPLE 111 An 8.5 kg. powder charge of 1,550 parts of a nickel master alloy containing 7% aluminium, 14% titanium and 9% didymium a rare earth metal mixture containing 50% lanthanum with neodymium and praseodymium and other rare earth metals) ground to pass a 74 micron screen; 1,800 parts of chromium powder smaller than 74 microns; 20.4 parts of Ni-Zr master alloy, 3.87 parts of Ni-B master alloy; and 5,241 parts of carbonyl nickel powder was dry impact milled in a 38 litre attritor mill containing 189 kg. of 6.3 mm. nickel pellets for 40 hours at an agitator speed of 132 r.p.m. The product was screened through a 350 micron sieve and packed into an 8.9 cm. diameter steel can, which was sealed without evacuation, soaked at 1,03 8C. and extruded to round bar 1.9 cm. diameter. The powder became consolidated by upsetting within the container prior to extrusion and good hot workability was evident from the fact that extrusion was possible at the relatively low temperature of 1,038C. The extruded bar was subjected to heat treatment comprising heating 2 hours at 1,275C. followed by heating 7 hours at 1,080C. and then for 16 hours at 705C. A coarse grain structure elongated in the extrusion direction was present. The extruded bar was characterized by a finely-divided and well-distributed dispersion of rare earth metal oxides, principally lanthana resulting from internal oxidation by reaction of extremely finely-divided rare earth metal and oxygen present in the milled powder.

The stress rupture properties of the heat treated bar were very good as illustrated by data set forth in the following Table IV, indicating a very uniform dispersion of fine refractory oxide particles.

TABLE IV Test Stress Time to Elongation Reduction Temp. (kg/mm) rupture (9b) in area (C) (Hrs) This example illustrates a special feature of the invention whereby dispersion-strengthened metals may be produced using as a starting material a powder having distributed therethrough on a micro-scale a metal whose oxide has a high heat of formation at 25C. exceeding kg. cal. per gram atom of oxygen. Said metal becomes oxidised in situ by oxygen available in limited supply in the powder by virtue of the very short diffusion distances involved, with the result that the resulting oxide is very fine and is well distributed in the resulting consolidated shape wherein the oxide is an effective dispersion strengthener.

EXAMPLE IV A further 8.5 kilogram powder charge containing about 1,490 parts of a Ni-17%, Ti-8.5%, A1 master alloy ground to less than 75 microns, 2,000 parts of chromium smaller than 75 microns, 1,330 parts of fine carbonyl nickel powders premixed with 10%, by weight, of line yttria (400 A) in a Waring blender, 24.8 parts of a Ni-Zr master alloy smaller than 75 microns, 3.9 parts ofa Ni-B master alloy smaller than 75 microns and 5,290 parts of carbonyl Ni powder was milled for 40 hours in a 38 litre attritor mill containing kg of 6.3 mm. nickel pellets at 132 r.p.m. The product powder was screened through a 350 micron screen and packed into a 8.9 cm. diameter steel can. The can was evacuated to less than 10 mm. of mercury pressure at 425C. and sealed by welding. The sealed, evacuated can was heated to 1,093C. and extruded to 15.5 mm. diameter bar. The extruded bar was heated in argon 2 hours at 1,275C., then at 1,080C. for 7 hours and cooled in air. It was then heated for 16 hours at 705C. and again air cooled. A desiralie c oarseg in 2.46 e1- ongated in the extrusion direction resultediThe bar contained 0.061% C, 0.92% soluble Al, 2,46% soluble Ti, 20.4% Cr, 0.029% soluble Zr, 0.005% B, 1.22% Y O and 0.37% A1 0 Specimens of the extruded, heat treated bar were subjected to stress-rupture testing with the excellent results set forth in the following Table V.

In addition, the yttriated material was found to be markedly more resistant to sulfidation corrosion resulting from exposure at 927C. to a fused salt bath containing, by weight, 90% sodium sulfate and sodium chloride than the non-dispersion strengthened base alloy. Similarly, the yttriated material was markedly more resistant than the non-dispersion strengthened base alloy in a cyclic oxidation test at 1,093C. in flowing air wherein the specimens were cycled to room temperature every 24 hours. In particular, the yttriated material was much more resistant to subsurface penetration than was the standard material in these tests.

FIG. 4 is a transmission electron photomicrograph taken at 100,000 diameters from the yttriated material of this example. The fine, substantially uniform distribution of finely divided dispersoid (yttria and alumina) as indicated by reference character G, and a substantially uniform distribution of gamma prime phase as indicated by reference character H in FIG. 4. Somewhat larger MC metal carbides indicated by reference character J are also evident in FIG. 4. FIG. 4 demonstrates the absence of segregation which characterizes materials of this invention.

EXAMPLE V Composite alloy powders having the composition of a conventional nickel base superalloy containing 10% Cr, 3% Mo, Co, 5.5% A1, 4.7% Ti, 1% V, 0.18% C, 0.06% Zr, 0.014% B, balance Ni, were produced by mechanical alloying. A mixture of 441 g. of Cr powder (less than 150 microns), 134 g. of Mo powder (less than 44 microns), 663 g. of Co powder (less than 44 microns), 1,005 g. of carbonyl Ni powder, 7.6 g. of graphite powder, 1,050 g. of less than 75 micron pow der of a Ni-15.96% Al-3.68% Ti master alloy, 932 g. of less than 75 micron powder of a Ni-9.08% Al-17.5% Ti master alloy, 71 g. of a less than 150 micron powder of a Ni-65% V master alloy, 12 g. ofa less than 75 micron powder of a Ni-28% Zr- 14.5% Al master alloy and 3.3 g. of a less than 75 micron powder of a Ni-18% B master alloy were placed in a high energy horizontal ball mill of 15 litres capacity having a stationary tank and a driven horizontal shaft provided with multiple agitator arms extending at right angle therefrom, and processed at 220 r.p.m. with 90 kg. of 9.5 mm. steel balls. A nitrogen atmosphere was maintained in the mill. Two batches were processed for 16 hours, one for 8 hours and one for 4 hours.

The internal powder structure of the batches processed for 16 hours was observed to be substantially homogeneous with the majority of the ingredient fragments within the composite particles being below 1 micron in size. In contrast, the structures of the 8 hour and 4 hour batches were progressively less homogeneous although all had substantially the same overall composite particle size distributions.

3,066 g. of one of the 16 hour batches, sieved to pass through a 350 micron screen was packed in a 8.9 cm. diameter mild steel can and evacuated to less than 10' mm of mercury pressure at 425C. through a stainless steel tube provided for that purpose. The can was sealed by fusion welding the tube and consolidated by hot extruding to 2.5 cm. diameter bar at 1,177C. The extrusion was accomplished with no difficulty, requiring less than two'thirds of the capacity of the press and moving at a ram speed of from 33 to 61 cm. per second. This, in spite of the fact that the composition as normally produced, is not readily hot workable and must be precision cast to final shape.

The results of hardness tests performed on samples of this extrusion in the as extruded condition and after two annealing treatments are given in Table VI.

Wrought, Dispersion-Strengthened Electrical Heating Elements 15 Heat-resistant alloys for electrical heating elements,

comprising one or both of iron and nickel alloyed with one or both of chromium and aluminium, suffer from segregation when made by casting. Soaking to homogenise the structure leads to little improvement and may result in grain coarsening, with adverse effects on forgeability, extrusion and rolling. In particular, certain well-known alloys which contain both aluminium and chromium, together with nickel or iron or both, are brittle at room temperature although soft at elevated temperatures. One such alloy contains 67% iron, 25%

chromium, 5% aluminium and 3% cobalt and another 55% iron, 37.5% chromium and 7.5% aluminium. These two alloys exhibit excellent resistance to oxidation and corrosion at elevated operating temperatures of about l,200l,300C., but tend to creep and lose their shape during service as electrical resistance elements.

These disadvantages are overcome by the wrought, dispersion-hardened electrical heating alloys provided by the invention which are characterized throughout by compositional uniformity (i.e., freedom from segregates) and by a high degree of dispersion uniformity and absence of stringers and attendant dispersoid free regions.

Broadly speaking, the alloys concerned are those containing at least 10% in all of one or both of chromium and aluminium, the chromium content not exceeding and the aluminium content not exceeding 34%, and from 0 to 5% silicon, the balance of the alloy 5 (apart from impurities) being at least in all of one or more of iron (5% to cobalt (up to 15%) and nickel (5% to and including from 0.05% to 25% by volume (based on the total composition) of a refractory compound dispersoid. Generally, the alloys have an electrical resistance of at least microhmslcm Advantageously, the chromium content is from 15 to 40%, the cobalt content does not exceed 10%, the aluminium content does not exceed 32%, the sum of the iron, cobalt and nickel content is from 50 to 80% and the dispersoid content is from 0.05 to 10 volume percent of the total composition.

A composition range particularly desirable for electrical heating alloys contains 1540% chromium, 3-20% aluminium, balance iron, with from 0.05 to 5 volume percent of dispersoid.

Dispersoids that are particularly useful are yttria, lanthana, thoria and the rare earth mixture didymium, in sizes less than 1 micron and preferably less than 0.1 micron. Oxides of zirconium, titanium, and beryllium and carbides, nitrides and borides of all the metals set forth above may also be used. Generally speaking, suitable refractory oxides are those of metals whose negative free energy of formation of the oxide per gram atom of oxygen at C. is at least 90,000 calories and whose melting point is at least 1,300C.

Specific examples of alloys that may be dispersion strengthened by the invention are set forth in Table VII below:

EXAMPLE v111 TABLE VII Alloy Resistance No. Microhms/cm Nominal Composition at 20C. C1 Al Fe Ni Others 17 1337 23 5 72 l8 l662 37.5 7.5 19 1379 20 5 73.5 1.5 $1 20 1163 20 8.5 68 2 s1 21 1122 16 22.5 1.5 Si 22 25 5 67 3 Co 23 15 5 80 24 20 4 76 25 15 5 5 26 15 Bal. 27 1013 20 43.5 35 1.5 Si 28 31.5 68.5 29 20 Some examples will now be given: 25 tlcle size less than microns, 132.2 g. of Cr powder EXAMPLE Vl An iron-aluminium alloy dispersion-strengthened with A1 0 is made from composite powder produced by dry impact milling a charge of 65 micron sponge iron and an Fe-Al master alloy crushed to powder smaller than 74 microns in the appropriate proportions with 3 volume percent of 0.03 micron gamma alumina using a 20:1 ball-to-powder ratio and 6 mm. nickel balls and an agitator speed of r.p.m. Milling for 45 hours produced a highly cold-worked powder of which the particles comprised a substantially homogeneous interdispersion of all the ingredients. The powder was vacuum packed in a mild steel can which was welded shut, heated to 1,093C. and extruded at a ratio of 16:1. After removal of the can material, the extruded bar was hotand cold-worked to ribbon and wire for use as electrical heating elements.

EXAMPLE VII In producing a wrought dispersion-strengthened electrical heating alloy containing, by weight, 20% Cr, 5% A1, 15% Si and 73.5% iron with 4 volume percent of Y O 2,300 g. of a brittle master alloy containing, by weight, 63.25% Fe, 21.7% A1, 6.5% Si and 8.55% yttrium metal, crushed to particles smaller than 75 microns, was blended with 4,870 g. of 150 micron highpurity sponge iron and 2,830 g. of 75 micron ferrochrome powder. The mixture was dry impact milled in a stirred attritor mill of 38 litres capacity at r.p.m. using 6 mm. hardened steel balls at a ballzpowder ratio of 15:1. Milling for 24 hours gave fully work-hardened composite powder. After sieving out particles larger than 0.35 mm., the powder was vacuum packed and welded shut in a mild steel can and the assembly heated to 1,093C. During this heating the oxygen adventitiously present within the powders combined with the yttrium metal to produce a fine uniform dispersion of Y O of less than 0.1 micron average particle size. The can was then extruded at 1,093C. at an extrusion ratio of 16:1 to rod, suitable for drawing down to size suitable for electrical heating elements.

of particle size less than 75 microns, 900 g. of 57 micron Fisher size carbonyl Ni powder, and sufficient 0.02 micron ThO to give 3 volume percent Th0 in the product. The mixture was dry impact milled for 50 hours at r.p.m. in a stirred attritor mill of 3.8 litres capacity using 6 mm. nickel balls at a ballzpowder ratio of 18:1. The composite powder was sieved through a 0.35 mm. mesh screen and vacuum packed and welded shut in a mild steel can; heated to 1,093C; and extruded at a ratio of 15:1 to rectangular section rod. The rod had Th0 particles less than 0.02 micron in size uniformly dispersed through it, which conferred stiffness and resistance to sagging in use at elevated temperatures.

Other dispersion-strengthened products that can advantageously be made include dispersion-strengthened nickel, copper, low alloy steels, maraging steels, zincbase alloys, the refractory metals chromium, niobium, tantalum, molybdenum and tungsten and their alloys, e.g., with up to 50% of other metal, platinum metalbase alloys and gold-base alloys. Some examples of these will now be given.

Dispersion-Strengthened Nickel EXAMPLE IX A charge consisting of 1,173 g. of carbonyl nickel powder having an average particle size of 3 to 5 microns and 27 g. of thoria-having a particle size of 0.005 micron was preblended in a high speed food blender and then dry impact milled in air at room temmerature for 24 hours. The mill contained 3.8 litres of carbonyl nickel balls of average diameter 6.2 mm., the ball-topowder ratio being 18:1 by volume, and was operated at an agitator speed of 176 r.p.m., which served to maintain substantially all the balls in a highly active state of mutual collision in which the ratio of the powders to the dynamic interstitial volume was about 1:18 by volume. The milled product consisted of composite particles of nickel with thoria particles very finely and uniformly disseminated through them, and having saturation hardness of 640 to 650 Vickers. After removal of the few coarse particles, the powder was placed in a mild steel extrusion can, degassed under vacuum at 400C., and then sealed in the can and extruded to bar at 932C. at an extrusion ratio of 16:1. The extruded product consisted of a nickel matrix with grain size less than microns having a fine, stable, substantially uniform dispersion of thoria particles less than 0.2 micron and most about 0.02 micron in size.

The properties of the material in the as-extruded condition and after various amounts of cold swaging are given in the following table:

TABLE VIII Test Hot Ultimate Tensile Strength (kg/mm R.A.

Temp. As-extruded 40% 61% 75% RA. Reduction in area It will be observed that this very satisfactory structure in the extruded material, and the associated high level of properties, were obtained from the composite powder of the invention with an extrusion ratio of only 16:1.

EXAMPLE X Batches of composite nickel-thoria powder were prepared by dry impact milling charges of 777.4 g. of carbonyl nickel powder and 22.6 g. of thoria, particle size 100-500 Angstroms, preblended in a high speed blender, for 24 hours in air at room temperature in the attritor mill of Example IX, using carbonyl nickel balls of average diameter 4.5 mm. at a ball-to-powder ratio of 26:1. The agitator speed was 176 r.p.m. After combining several batches of the product powder and removal of particles too large to pass a 0.35 mm. mesh screen, 2,500 g. of the composite powder were sealed in an 8.9 cm. diameter mild steel can and extruded to 2.2 cm. diameter bar at 982C. Stress rupture tests at 1,093C. on specimens of the bar that had been further cold swaged to 75% reduction in area gave the follow- The strength of a 90% tantalum tungsten alloy is increased by the incorporation of thoria. A mixture of 2,160 g. tantalum and 240 g. tungsten, particle size from 3 to 40 microns, with 28 g. of 0.02 micron ThO (about 2% by volume) was preblended and then dry impact milled in a nitrogen atmosphere for 40-50 hours at 176 r.p.m., using 1 cm diameter hardened steel shot at a ballzpowder ratio of 2:1 in an attritor mill as described in Example IX. After 48 hours the powder product had reached saturation hardness. After screening out particles larger than 0.35 mm, the composite powder was placed in an 8.9 cm. diameter molybdenum can, which was evacuated, sealed and extruded to 2 cm. diameter at 1,315C. The dispersion of thoria in the resulting wrought bar was highly uniform both longitudinally and transversely.

EXAMPLE XII In producing dispersion-strengthened niobium, 1,100 g. of 10-50 micron Nb powder was preblended with 26 g. of 0.04 micron thoria powder, and dry attritor milled in a nitrogen atmosphere at 176 r.p.m. for 48 hours using 6 mm. tool steel balls at a ballzpowder ratio of 18:1. After sieving through a 0.35 mm. screen, the composite powder was charged into an 8.9 cm. molyb denum can which was evacuated, sealed, heated to 1,482C. in hydrogen, and extruded into 2.5 cm. bar at 1,482C.

EXAMPLE XIII Dispersion-hardened tungsten was produced by milling a charge of 2,500 g. of W powder with 27 g. Th0 (2% by volume) as in the preceding example, to give a composite powder which was screened and extruded in an 8.9 cm. evacuated Mo can, after heating to 1,925C. in hydrogen, to bar 2.5 cm. in diameter. Dispersion-Strengthened Low-Alloy Steels Dispersion-strengthening of low-alloy steels, particularly those containing molybdenum or vanadium, with or without chromium, having for example, the composition set out in the following Table, enables low alloy steels having improved high temperature tensile and creep strength to be produced.

Low alloy steels which may be produced in accordance with the invention include steels containing up to 0.8% carbon, at least 0.25% of one or both of Cr up to 5% and Mo up to 5%, from 0 to 2% V, from 0 to 2% W, from 0 to 5% Ni, from 0 to 2% Si, and from 0 to 2% Mn. Examples of such steels are given in the following Table X:

EXAMPLE XIV In producing a dispersion-strengthened low alloy steel containing 2% Cr, 1% Mo and 0.4% C, a brittle master alloy containing 30% Cr, 15% Mo, 5% C, balance Fe was ground to pass a 74 micron screen, and g. were preblended with 1,120 g. of 65 micron sponge iron. This mixture was dry milled with 30 g. of 0.02 micron ThO as in the preceding Example. After screening through a 0.35 mm. screen, the composite powder was placed in an 8.9 cm. mild steel can which was heated to 400C, evacuated, quenched under vacuum,

sealed and extruded at 982C. to 2 cm. diameter rod.

Dispersion-Strengthened Maraging Steel The recently developed maraging steels, i.e., steels that are age-hardenable in the martensitic state and have compositions broadly within the range Ni 10-30%, Ti 0.29% and Al up to 5%, such that (Ti Al) does not exceed 9%, Co up to 25%, Mo up to 10%, Fe balance (at least 50%) would benefit from dispersion strengthening. The rather sluggish diffusivity of molybdenum and other materials in powder mixtures may be countered by the use of composite powders in the present invention. Incorporation of a dispersoid in the powder enables a dispersion-strengthened product to be made by hot extrusion that has improved strength properties in the range 480650C. Dispersion-Strengthened Zinc-Base Metals Wrought zinc and zinc alloys, containing, for example, 50% or more zinc, can be dispersion-strengthened in accordance with the invention, thus increasing their resistance to creep. Examples of such'alloys include: Pb 0.l50.35%, Cd 0.1530%, Zn bal.; Pb 0.0050.1%, Cu 0.51.5%, Ti 0.121.5%, Zn bal.; Mg up to 0.025%, A] 0.25-0.6%, Zn bal.; Cu up to 3.5%, Mg 0.02-0.1%, Al 3.54.5%, Zn bal.

EXAMPLE XV In producing dispersion-strengthened zinc, 1,500 g. of Zn powder that passes a 150 micron screen was preblended with 25 g. of 0.02 micron gamma alumina and dry impact milled for 50 hours at 180 rpm. using a 20:1 ball: powder ratio of hardened steel balls. After sieving to remove coarse particles larger than 0.35 mm., the composite powder was cold-pressed to a 6.3 cm. diameter cylinder, which was sintered for 3 hours at 315C. in very dry hydrogen. The sintered billet was machined smooth and consolidated by extrusion at 177C. to a 1.6 cm. diameter rod that had a highly uniform dispersion of A1 particles in both the longitudinal and transverse directions and was substantially free from stringers.

Dispersion-Strengthened Platinum Group Metals and Alloys Dispersion-strengthening of platinum-base metals is particularly desirable to improve their strength at elevated temperatures, and alloys that can advantageously be strengthened include Pt with up to 50% Pd; Pt with 35-40% Rh; Pt with up to 35% Ir; Pt with up to 8% W. Examples of dispersion-strengthened Pt-base metals that can be produced as wrought shapes in accordance with the invention are: Pt with 2 vol. of 0.02 micron ThO Pt 75%-Rh 25% with 3 vol. of 0.04 micron yttria; Pt 92%-W 8% with 5 vol.% of 1 micron Ti carbide; Pt 90%-Pd with 2 vol.% of 0.1 micron ZrO Dispersion-Strengthened Gold-Base Metals Gold is quite soft and has low resistance to creep. It can be hardened by addition of alloying elements, and this method of hardening can be replaced or supplemented by dispersion-hardening in accordance with the invention. Gold-based metals that can be advantageously so hardened include gold alloys, e.g., Au 54-60%, Pt 14-48%, Pd l8%, Ag 71l%, Cu 7-13%, Ni 1% max., Zn 1% max; Au 62-64%, Pt 7l3%, Pd 6% max., Ag 9-l6%, Cu 7l4%, Zn 2% max., and Au 70%-Pt 30%. Volume loadings of up to 10% or more of dispersoids such as thoria, yttria, alumina and refractory carbides can readily be produced in wrought goldlbase metals. Dispersion-Strengthened Copper An example of the dispersion-strengthening of copper to improve its resistance to creep at elevated temperatures while maintaining high electrical and thermal conductivity is as follows:

EXAMPLE XVI A charge of 1,173 g. of 710 micron Fisher sub-sieve size Cu powder and 27 g. of 0.03 micron alumina was dry milled for 30 hours at 176 rpm. in the stirred attritor mill of FIG. 1, using 6.5 mm. hardened steel balls, the ballzpowder ratio being 18:1. The composite powder (after screening) was compacted and sintered in hydrogen at 850C. for 1 hour, then vacuum welded into a Cu can and hot extruded at a ratio of 18:1 at 800C. to produce a wrought Cu product substantially free from stringers. The product after reduction to wire had high electrical and thermal conductivities together with strength at both ambient and elevated temperatures substantially above that of pure copper. Sintered Refractory-Metal Compositions Sintered refractory-metal materials, such as sintered refractory carbides, otherwise known as cemented carbides, which are widely used for cutting or abrasionresistant tools, oil drilling bits and dies, consist of 24 percent or more by volume of finely divided particles of the hard refractory compound and embedded in a matrix of iron, nickel, cobalt or other ductile metal to form a body of high hardness and compressive strength. Conventionally, the sintered body is formed by compacting a mixture of the refractory compound, e.g., tungsten carbide, and the matrix-forming bonding metal, in the form of finely-divided powders, and heating the compact in vacuum or dry hydrogen to bring about liquid phase sintering.

The preferred binder metal is cobalt, since this dissolves only about 1% tungsten carbide at ambient temperatures and therefore provides a tough matrix. Iron and nickel dissolve more tungsten carbide and thus form less ductile matrices.

The mixture of tungsten carbide, cobalt, and an organic wax binder is made by milling the powder for 60 hours or more in a protective fluid, such as hexane, containing stainless steel balls. During the milling, part of the cobalt powder is smeared onto the surface of the carbide particles as a very thin coating.

The microstructure of the compounds, in particular the size of the carbide particles in the matrix; their distribution; and the porosity and the quality of the bond between the binder metal and the carbide particles, are factors which affect the hardness and strength of the sintered product. The average particle size of refractory carbides in the sintered product is limited by that of the starting materials, which is generally from 2 to 10 microns.

This difficulty is overcome, and an extremely finely dispersed structure of very fine particles of carbide or other refractory compound is obtained, if the carbide is incorporated into composite particles inter-dispersed with the binder metal by dry impact milling in accordance with U.S. application No. 709,700. These particles are to be distinguished from those resulting from the conventional blending operation, in which the binder metal is smeared onto the hard particles as a coating. According to the invention, sintered refractory compound materials are made by compacting and sintering composite particles containing finely divided and inter-dispersed constituents in which the distance between the constituent sub-particles is advantageously less than microns and preferably less than 2 microns, or even 1 micron. This may be done in various ways. A body of powder can be consolidated by hot pressing at an elevated temperature high enough for sintering to occur; it can be first hot-compacted or cold-compacted and sintered under non-oxidising conditions; or the mixture may be extruded in a can, e.g., of steel, and the whole extruded at a temperature high enough for sintering to occur during extrusion. The wrought products produced in any of these ways have a high degree of dispersion uniformity of the hard phase in the matrix.

The refractory compound, which comprises 30 percent or more by volume of the composition, may be a carbide, boride or nitride, of titanium, zirconium, hafnium, chromium, tungsten, molybdenum, vanadium, columbium, tantalum; silicon carbide, or an oxide of aluminium, beryllium, a rare earth metal, e.g., cerium, lanthanum, or yttrium, magnesium, zirconium, titanium, and thorium. Intermetallic compounds such as aluminides, beryllides or silicides may be used under conditions in which they retain their identity.

The matrix-forming binding metal may comprise at least one metal from the following groups:

a. the iron group metals iron, nickel, cobalt; alloys of these metals with each other; and alloys of at least one iron group metal with at least one of the metals chromium, molybdenum, tungsten, niobium, tantalum, vanadium, titanium, zirconium and hafnium.

b. a metal or alloy of the group silver, copper, and a ductile metal of the platinum group (e.g., platinum, palladium, rhodium or ruthenium).

c. aluminium, zinc, lead or alloys thereof.

The matrix-forming binding metals of group b are particularly useful in the production of wear resistant electrical contact elements.

The binder alloys of group a include the well known superalloy compositions capable of being age-hardened at temperatures of about 600 to 1,000C. These resist softening under conditions where the cutting tool is used at relatively high cutting speeds which tend to overheat the cutting edge of the tool. Examples of agehardenable superalloy compositions are those falling within the following range by weight: 4% to 65% chromium, at least 1% in sum of an age hardening element selected from the group consisting of up to aluminum and up to titanium, up to molybdenum, up to 20% niobium, up to 40% tungsten, up to 30% tantalum, up to 2% vanadium, up to 15% manganese, up to 2% carbon, up to 1% silicon, up to 1% boron, up to 2% zirconium, up to 4% hafnium and up to 0.5% magnesium, the balance essentially at least one element from the group consisting of iron, nickel and cobalt with the sum of these being present in an amount of at least about 25%.

Examples of compositions are as follows:

Co 15-25% with up to 3 wt. percent (TaC TiC),

balance WC;

Co 25-45% with up to 2 wt. percent (TaC TiC),

balance WC;

Co 15-25% with 10-22 wt. percent TiC, balance Co l5'-25%with l8-30% TaC, balance WC;

Ni-Mo alloy 15-50%, TiC 85-50% The Ni-Mo matrix alloy in the last composition may contain 25-70%, advantageously 35-60% molybdenum, balance nickel.

The compositions alsoo include the recentlydeveloped heat resisting metal carbide compositions for high temperature applications, known as cermets, for example, from 85 to 24 volume percent, and preferably at least 60 percent, of carbides of titanium and chromium with the balance nickel or nickel-base alloy as the binder metal. The carbide phase generally consists predominantly of TiC with up to 25 percent of Cr carbide.

Some examples will now be given:

EXAMPLE XVII A powder mixture of 25% of 5-7 micron Co and of 3-5 micron WC by weight (63 percent WC by volume) is dry impact milled in a stirred attritor mill of the type shown in FIG. 1 at 185 r.p.m., using hardened steel balls at a ballzpowder ratio of 25:1 for 50 hours to form a wrought composite powder consisting of particles having WC particles homogeneously interdispersed in a C0 matrix. The WC particles were reduced in size to less than 1 micron. The powder was consolidated by hot pressing in a graphite die at 1,350C. for 3 minutes using 35 kg/cm pressure.

EXAMPLE XVIII To produce a heatand oxidation-resistant TiC/Ni -Cr 20 alloy cerrnet composition, a mixture of 1,240 g. of 5-7 microns TiC particles, 448 g. of 4-8 micron carbonyl Ni and 112 g. of Cr powder smaller than 75 microns was dry impact milled in a stirred attritor mill of the type shown in FIG. 1 at r.p.m. for 50 hours, using 6 mm. hardened steel balls at a ballzpowder ratio of 20:1 to produce a wrought composite powder in which the particles comprised uniformly interdispersed Ni, Cr and TiC.

EXAMPLE XIX This is an example of the production of a sintered electric contact material containing 50% Ag and 50% WC, by weight, (40% WC by volume).

A composite powder was made by dry milling 1,000 g. of Ag of particle size below 75 microns and 1,000 g. of 5-7 microns WC powder, using an attritor mill containing hardened steel balls at a ball:powder ratio of 18:1, and operating at r.p.m. for 45 hours. The WC particles were reduced by the milling to less than 1 micron in size. The powder is then screened to remove particles coarser than 100 microns and then hot pressed into shapes for electrical contacts in a graphite Metal Systems of Limited Solubility Metal systems comprising two or more metal constituents having limited mutual solubility in the liquid and- /or the solid state, i.e., that are immiscible or only partly miscible, tend to segregate or separate on solidification if it is attempted to make them by melting. Infiltration of one molten metal into a solid skeleton of the other, e.g., copper into iron, or compacting mixtures of the respective powders followed by liquid phase sintering, also lead to non-uniform segregated microstructures, subject to the limitations imposed by the particle sizes of the powders employed.

Consolidated metal products of these systems can readily be made from appropriate composite powders by the invention, with a highly refined internal structure substantially free from segregation, lakes, pools or dendritic coring.

Examples of binary systems of limited solubility include: lead-copper, copper-iron, copper-tungsten, silver-tungsten, copper-chromium, silver-chromium, copper-molybdenum, silver-molybdenum, silvermanganese, silver-nickel, platinumgold, berylliummolybdenum, and silver-platinum. The invention is also applicable to limited solubility metal systems containing three or more elements, e.g., copper-nickelchromium.

Examples of composition ranges that may be produced are: Cu with 195% Pb; Fe with 1-95% Cu; W with 95% Cu; W with 2-98% Ag; and Cu with 5-95% EXAMPLE XX This is an example of the production of a composite iron-copper powder containing Fe 80%, Cu

Hydrogen-reduced copper, particle size less than 45 microns, and sponge iron, particle size less than 150 microns, were dry impact milled in air in a 50 c.c. capacity high speed shaker mill operated at 1,200 cycles per minute, which produced composite metal particles in a very short period of time compared with the attritor mill of FIG. 1. The mill was charged with 10 g. of powder and 45 g. of 6.2 mm. nickle balls to give a ballto-powder ratio of 4.521 and a ratio of dynamic interstitial volume to powder volume of 41:1.

Milling for 30 minutes produced composite particles of hardness of 353 Vickers and average size 135 microns, with a fine, uniform striated structure, the average spacing between striations being about 1 micron.

Consolidation by compacting in a steel tube which was vacuum sealed, followed by hot forging at 982C. to full density gave a highly uniform wrought product.

EXAMPLE XXI This is an example of the production of a limitedsolubility 50% copper 50% lead product.

Equal volumes of lead filings and hydrogen-reduced copper, particle size less than 45 microns, were milled in the shaker mill of the preceding example at a ball-topowder ratio of 4: 1. After 10 minutes the product particles had a hardness of 34.6 Vickersand a particlesize of 100-200 microns and. after30minutes. 69.5 Vickers and 100-150 microns. in each case the individual composite particles contained the two elements substantially uniformly inter-dispersed, the particle spacing being about 5 microns after 10 minutes and about 1 micron after 30 minutes. The structure did not exhibit striations. This is believed to be due to the fact that lead, which has a melting point of about 600K, is self-annealing when worked at ambient temperatures.

Because of the large amount of lead present, the composite powder can be cold deformed, e.g., by cold extrusion or cold pressing in a die, into any desired shape, for example, an anti-friction bearing element.

By a similar technique, highly uniform wrought prod ucts of the components 50% Ag-50% W for electrical een estma ializ 2 %a5.0 .0i7. 0%. W; 89% Au-20% Pb; 50%-95% Pt/505% Ag; and 5095% lPb/505% Au may be obtained. in a like manner, compositions within the liquid immiscibility range of 663% Cu in the Cu-Cr system, e.g., Cu %-Cr 30%; within the immiscibility range of the Cu-Mo system, e.g., from 298% Cu, balance Mo can be produced, Silver nickel compositions suitable for electric contact applications, including Ag 60%-Ni 40%, may be produced, as may beryllium-molybdenum compositions including Be 50%-Mo 50%. Beryllium powder may have a thin oxide coating because of its propensity to surface oxidation. This oxide may be used to provide dispersion- :strengthening in the final product. Dispersion-Strengthened Stainless Steel Stainless steel alloys are particularly prone to segregation when cast into ingots, making the ingots difficult to forge. Thus, the rather slow solidification of large ingots leads to the formation of large dendrites, large, non-uniformly distributed grains, and composition segregates along the length and across the width of the ingots. Prolonged soaking at high temperatures in an attempt to homogenize the metallurgical structure of the ingot generally effects little improvement, and may even cause further grain coarsening, with further adverse effects on hot forgeability, extrusion, or rolling. This tendency to segregation also leads to non-uniform precipitation-hardening response in steels containing hardening constituents. The production of stainless steel by conventional techniques of power metallurgy suffers from the disadvantages already discussed in general above, particularly that of oxidation of the more reactive alloying elements, e.g., chromium, and such precipitation hardeners as aluminium and titanium during processing, and, in the case of dispersionhardened compositions, the formation of stringers.

One advantageous class of products of the present invention is that comprising wrought dispersion strengthened stainless steels characterized by a high degree of uniformity of composition and, in the case of precipitation-hardening compositions, hardening response, together with freedom from segregation and stringers. This is readily achieved by the use of composite particles of the corresponding composition produced by high energy impact milling to saturation hardness and beyond as described hereinbefore, according to US application No. 790,700, since these composite particles are both statistically and internally substantially uniform.

Stainless steels which can be produced in accordance with the invention may have compositions ranging, by weight, from 4% to 30% chromium, from 0 to 35% nickel, up to 10% manganese, and up to 1.0% carbon, together with from 0.5% to 25%, e.g., 0.05% to 10%, by volume of a dispersoid of a refractory compound, the balance, apart from inpurities and incidental ingredients, being iron in an amount of at least 45%. It will be understood that here, as elsewhere in the specification, the percentages of the constituents other than the dispersoid, refer to the composition of the alloy matrix.

More preferably, the steels contain from 8% to 30% chromium, up to 20% nickel, up to manganese and up to 0.25% and more preferably, up to 0.15% carbon together with from 0.05% to by volume of a dis- To produce the wrought, dispersion-strengthened stainless steel product, a batch of the wrought, composite, mechanically alloyed, dense metal particles of the appropriate composition and preferably having an avpersoid of a refractory compound and the iron content 5 erage size such that the surface area per unit volume of is at least 55%. particles is not more than 6,000 cm /cm of particles,

As will be appreciated, the stainless steel composii.e., substantially free from particles smaller than 5 mitions may contain other alloying additions, e.g., up to crons is hot-consolidated to a wrought metal shape. 5% silicon, up to 5% molybdenum, up to 8% tungsten, This may conveniently be effected by hot extrusion of up to 2% aluminium, up to 2% titanium, up to 2% ni- 10 the powder sealed in a metal can, e.g., of mild steel. obium/tantalum, up to 7% copper. Annealing of the heavily cold-worked powder takes Precipitation-hardenable stainless steels include place during heating in the can to the extrusion temperthose containing at least 0.2% by weight of one or more ature. of aluminium up to 2%, titanium up to 2%, niobium up Two examples of the product1on of stalnless steels to 2% and copper up to 7 These steels may also connow be glvenr tain up to 0.4% phosphorous and up to 0.3% n1trogen.

EXAMPLE XXII Preferred amounts of d1sperso1d range from about 0.05 to 5 volume per cent at sizes below one micron. A mlXtlll'e p g, y g 272% Of p r d Impurities and incidental ingredients that may be low-carbon ferrochrome, particle size 44-74 microns, present include some sulphur and/or selenium for free containing Cr Si 1.01%, SiO 1.35%, Cr O machining, etc. 0.54%, Fe balance; 62.8% of high purity sponge iron Examples of the types of stainless steel that can be powder, particle size less than microns; and 10% produced in accordance with the invention are given in of carbonyl nickel powder, average particle size 3-5 the X1. Table Xi. microns, was milled in a stirred attritor mill of the type TABLE X1 AlSl Nominal Composition Type C Mn Si Cr Ni Others 1 Austenitic Steels 201 0.15 max 5.50-7.50 1.0 max 16-18 3.5 5.5 0.25N max 202 0.15 max 7.5 10 1.0 max 17-19 4-6 0.25N max 301 0.15 max 2.0 max 1.0 max 16-18 6 8 302 0.15 max 2.0 max 1.0 max 17-19 8 l0 303 0.15 max 2.0 max 1.0 max 17-19 8 10 0.15 min S 308 0.08 max 2.0 max 1.0 max 19-21 10 12 309 0.20 max 2.0 max 1.0 max 22-24 12 l5 314 0.25 max 2.0 max 2.0-3.0 23-26 19 22 316 0.08 max 2.0 max 1.0 max 16-18 10 14 2.0-3.0 M0 321 0.08 max 2.0 max 1.0 max 17-19 9 12 5 C min Ti 347 0.08 max 2.0 max 1.0 max 17-19 9 13 10XC min Nb/Ta MARTENSITIC STEEL 403 0.15 max 1.0 max 0.5 max 11.5-13 414 0.15 max 1.0 max 1.0 max 11.5-13.5 1.25-2.5 431 0.20 max 1.0 max 1.0 max 15-17 1.25-2.5 44013 0.75-0.95 1.0 max 1.0 max 16-18 0.75 Mo max 440C OBS-1.2 1.0 max 1.0 max 16-18 0.75 Mo max 501 0.1 max 1.0 max 1.0 max 4-6 0.04-0.65 Mo Nominal Composition 405 0.08 max 1.0 max 1.0 max 11.5-14.5 0.1-0.3 A1 430 0.12 max 1.0 max 1.0 max 14-18 43F 0.12 max 1.25 max 1.0 max 14-18 0.15 S min 446 0.2 max 1.5 max 1.0 max 23-27 0.25 N max Nonstandard Grades VD A181 Type C Mn l1 Si K: Cr Ni Others 316 F 0.6 1.5 0.5 18 13 2.25 Mo 0.131, 0.15s 418 1.17 0.4 0.3 12.75 2.0 3.0 w Stain- I055 w 0.07 0.5 0.5 16.75 6.75 0.1; Ti 0.2 A1 17-4 PH 004 0.4 0.5 16.50 4.25 0.25 Nb 3.6 Cu 17-7PH 0.07 0.7 0.4 17.0 7.0 1.15 Al PH 157 0.07 0.7 0.4 15.0 7.0 1.15 Al Mo 2.25 Mo 17-10P 1.12 0.75 0.5 17.0 10.5 0.211 P TABLE XII Milled 16 hours Milled 48 hours Heat-treatment Hardness (Vickers) As milled 785 794 30 mins./982C. 381 523 30 mins./1066C. 324 409 l hour/l204C. 200-220 After heating for 30 minutes at 1,066C. the internal structure of the 48-hour particles was homogeneous, and compacting at 56.2 kg/mm gave a compact having density of 74% of the true density and a green strength of 76.2 kg/cm. The initial hardness of the particles was remarkably high compared with the hardness of 233 Vickers of a commercial atomised stainless steel powder.

EXAMPLE XXIII Another stainless steel composition was produced by dry milling a mix containing 84 g. of carbonyl nickel powder of an average particle size 3-5 microns, 341 g. of high purity ferrochrome powder (0.1% SiO 70% Cr, balance l averageparticTe size "izo'm'icrahs' and 763 g. of high purity sponge iron powder (0.032% carbon, 0.115% silica) of particle size less than 150 microns for 40 hours in air in an attritor mill, run at 176 r.p.m. with a ball-to-powder ratio of 18:1 by volume. The resulting composite particles had an average particle size of 85 microns. Extrusion of the product, vacuum-sealed in a mild steel can, to rod at an extrusion ratio of 12.5:] at 1,038C., gave a product analysing Ni 9%, soluble Cr 20%, Si 0.09%, Cr O 2.15%, Fe balance, which contained a finely divided grayish dispersoid uniformly distributed therein. The dispersoid is believed to have been chromium oxide. At room temperature, the material exhibited a tensile strength of 137.5 kg/mm a yield strength (0.2% offset) of 121.0 kg/mm an elongation of 7.5%, a reduction in area of 29% and a modulus of elasticity of 18.8 X 10 kg/mm The material had a Vickers hardness of 421 and was very slightly ferromagnetic.

After heating for 90 hours at 1,093C. it was nonmagnetic and had a Vickers hardness of 390, and at 650C. it had a stress-rupture life of 44.9 hours with 2.5% elongation under a stress of 24.6 kg/mm. At 816C. and 7 kg/mm load sample was unbroken after 70 hours.

The properties clearly demonstrated this material was dispersion-strengthened.

EXAMPLE XXIV In producing a dispersion-strengthened, precipitation hardenable, wrought stainless steel product of the 17-7 PH type containing, by weight, 0.07% C, 0.7% Mn,

0.4% Si, 17% Cr, 7% Ni, 1.15% Al, and 2.5% zirconia, the balance, apart from impurities, being Fe, the following starting materials are employed: (a) low carbon ferrochrome containing about chromium and some silicon of particle size 44-75 microns; (b) high purity sponge iron of particle size less than 150 microns; (c) carbonyl nickel powder of about 3 to 5 microns average size; (d) ferroaluminium containing about 65% aluminium and zirconia of about 400 Angstroms average size. A 900 gram batch proportioned to yield the foregoing composition is placed in the attritor mill as described hereinbefore and dry impact milled in a nitrogen atmosphere for 48 hours at 176 r.p.m. using a 3.8 litre volume of nickel pellets in size at a ball-topowder ratio of 24:1. After the 48-hour milling the composite particles were of optimum uniformity, and were of about microns average particle size.

After removal from the mill, and passing through a 177 micron screen, the poweder was vacuum sealed by welding in a mild steel can. The canned powder was then heated for 1.5 hours to 1,038C., and extruded to rod at an extrusion ratio of 16:1, the extruded material having approximately the nominal composition of 17-7 PI-l stainless, except for the presence of a highly uniform dispersion of finely divided zirconia (about 400 Angstroms in average size). The extruded rod is solution annealed at 1,200C., reheated at about 760C. for 1 /2 hours, air cooled and again reheated at 565C. for 1% hours and cooled. Thus, the steel is strengthened using the two-fold effect of dispersion-strengthening and precipitation hardening.

A special group of two-phase stainless steels is now known which are compositionally adjusted to provide a micro-structure containing ferrite and either martensite or austenite. These steels contain 2%, preferably 4.5% to 8% or 12% nickel, 18%, preferably 23% to 28% or even 35%, chromium, up to 1.5% titanium, up to 1% vanadium, balance essentialy iron. It is found that powder mixtures of powders proportioned to yield such steels milled to saturation hardness and beyond in a high energy impact mill, e.g., an attritor, exhibit exceptionally fine two-phase structures when hot consolidated by extrusion or hot forging of the canned powders at temperatures in the range of e.g., 1,700F. to 2,000F. Such fine-structured or microduplex structural consolidated materials exhibit superplasticity at elevated temperatures.

High Carbon Tool Steels High carbon tool steels are particularly prone to segrgation during solidification of the ingot when made by melting methods, with the formation of large dendrites and of segregates or aggregates of carbide. The carbides are brittle and adversely affect the ductility of the ingot, but the segregates or aggregates may, with difficulty, be dispersed to a limited extent by mechanical working of the ingot. Even so, the carbide tends to be distributed in the forged or hot-worked product as elongated stringers in the driection of working, with areas between them impoverished in carbides.

It is also difficult to obtain good composition homogeneity by solid state diffusion at elevated temperatures when powder metallurgy methods are used, since such alloying ingredients as chromium, tungsten, and molybdenum diffuse only sluggishly in the powder condition.

The use of a composite powder produced by dry high energy milling of starting powder mixtures proportioned to provide a high carbon tool steel composition as the starting material for the powder metallurgical production of high speed tool steels enables the production of wrought high carbon tool steel characterized sten and molybdenum, up to 2% silicon, up to 2% manganese, up to 5% nickel and up to cobalt, the balance (at least 40%), apart from impurities being iron.

by a substantially uniform dispersion of finely divided 5 The alloying elements may advantageously be prescarbides; and substantial freedom from carbide segreent in the ranges 3% to 15% chromium, up to 10% or gates and aggregates. The degree of uniformity of the vanadium, up to tungsten and up to 12% mostructure depends on the uniformity, bot statistical and lybdenum. A particularly useful CR-V-W tool steel internal, of the composite particles. The increased rate composition is one containing Cr 3 to 9%, V 0.3 to of diffusion and alloying resulting from the high degree 10 10%, W l to 25%, Mo 0 to 10%, Fe balance. A particuof cold work in the composite particles is particularly lar advantage of the invention is that carbide formers advantageous in overcoming the sluggish diffusion tensuch as tantaluum, niobium, hafnium, zirconium and dencies of the alloying elements. titanium can be added in amounts up to 15% and well Broadly speaking, the tool steels of the invention distributed in the form of carbides in the resulting tool Contain from (17% t0 -g-, t0 Carbon, and 15 steel composition. Examples of specific alloys that may at least 0.1%, advantageously at least 1%, of at least be made are give in the following table XIII, the balone of the alloying elements chromium, vanadium, tugance of each composition being iron.

TABLE XIII Nominal Composition by Weight Type C Mn S1 Cr Ni V W Mo Co Steel Chromium 0.6-0.8 0.1-0.4 0.15-0.3

Chromium- Molybdenum 0.3-0.7 0.1-0.4 1.1-1.5 0.5-0.5

Tungsten- Finirh- 1.25-1.40 0.1-0.4 0.1-0.5 0.2-0.4 3.25-40 0.2 0.4 ing Steel Semi- 1.15-1.25 0.1-0.4 0 1-0.4 3.75-4.25 3-3.3 4.0-4 5 high Speed Steels 1.35-1.45 0.1-0.4 0.1-0.4 3.75-4.25 3.9-4.4 4.0-4.5 1.05-1.15 0.1-0.4 0104 3.75-4.25 3.75-4.25 2.3-2.7 2.4-2.8

Air-Hardening Die 0.9-1.05 0.4-0.s5 0.1-0.4 4.75-5.25 0.15-0.5 0.9-1 15 Steels High 1.4-1.6 0.2-0.4 0.1-0.4 11.5-12.5 0.2-1.0 0.7-0.9 Carbon, High Chro- 2.1-2.3 0.2-0.4 0.1-0.4 11.5-12.5 o.2-0.s 0.7-0.9 mium Die Steels 2.0-2.2 o.2-0.4 0.7-1.0 11.5-12.5 0.6-0.9

w 2 1545 03.03 0.3-0.8 5-5.5 3.75-5.0 0.95-l.3 0.8-1.3 Resis- M. Die 2.1-2.3 0.3-0.5 0.1-0.4 3.75-4.25 3.75- Steels Chro- 0.9-1.1 0.03-0.5 0.1-0.4 0.5-0.3 1.2-1.6 mium Nickel Tung- 0.8-0.85 0.1-0.4 0 1-0.4 4-4.25 2-2.15 18-185 05-075 sten Types Tungsten-Cobalt Types 0.7-0.75 0.1-0.4 0 1-0.4 4-4.5 1.0-1.25 18-19 0.5-0 3 4.75-5.25 1.5-1.6 0.1-0.4 0 1-0.4 4.5-4.75 4.75-5 0 12.5-13.5 0.4-0.6 4.75-5.25 0.75-0.85 0.1-0.4 0 1-0.4 4.0-4.5 l.6-- 18.75-20.5 0 6-0 8 11.5-12.25

Molybdenum Types 0.78-0.85 0.1-0.4 0.1-0.4 3.75-40 1-1.25 1.5-1.65 8-9 0.97-1.03 0.1-0.4 0.1-0.4 3.75-40 9-2.1 1.5-1.75 8.5-8.75

Molybdenum- Cobalt 0.8-0.85 0.1-0.4 0.1-0.4 3.75-4.25 1.1-1.4 1.5-1.8 825- 4.75-5.25 Types 

2. A mechanically alloyed metal powder according to claim 1 having an alloy composition comprising metal constituents of limited solubility from the group consisting of copper with about 1% to about 95% lead, iron with about 1% to about 95% copper, tungsten with about 2% to about 98% silver, tungsten with about 25% to about 50% copper, copper with about 5% to about 95% chromium, copper with about 2% to about 98% molybedenum, nickel with about 60% silver and molybdenum with about 50% beryllium.
 3. A mechanically alloyed metal powder according to claim 1 wherein said dispersoid is a refractory oxide in the amount of about 0.05% to about 10% by volume and wherein the minimum dimension of said fragments does not exceed about 3 microns. 